R-PTP-κ inhibits contact-dependent cell growth by suppressing E2F activity

Cited 1 time in scopus
Metadata Downloads
Title
R-PTP-κ inhibits contact-dependent cell growth by suppressing E2F activity
Author(s)
Hyun Ahm Sohn; Minho Kang; H Ha; Young Il Yeom; Kyung Chan ParkDong Chul Lee
Bibliographic Citation
Biomedicines, vol. 10, no. 12, pp. 3199-3199
Publication Year
2022
Abstract
Density-dependent regulation of cell growth is presumed to be caused by cell-cell contact, but the underlying molecular mechanism is not yet clearly defined. Here, we report that receptor-type protein tyrosine phosphatase-kappa (R-PTP-κ) is an important regulator of cell contact-dependent growth inhibition. R-PTP-κ expression increased in proportion to cell density. siRNA-mediated R-PTP-κ downregulation led to the loss of cell contact-mediated growth inhibition, whereas its upregulation reduced anchorage-independent cell growth in soft agar as well as tumor growth in nude mice. Expression profiling and luciferase reporter system-mediated signaling pathway analysis revealed that R-PTP-κ induced under cell contact conditions distinctly suppressed E2F activity. Among the structural domains of R-PTP-κ, the cytoplasmic domain containing the tandemly repeated PTP motif acts as a potent downregulator of the E2F pathway. Specifically, R-PTP-κ suppressed CDK2 activity through the induction of p21Cip1/WAF-1 and p27Kip1, resulting in cell cycle arrest at the G1 phase. In transcriptome-based public datasets generated from four different tumor types, R-PTP-κ expression was negatively correlated with the expression pattern and prognostic value of two known E2F1 target genes (CCNE1 and CDC25A). Therefore, our results indicate that the R-PTP-κ-E2F axis plays a crucial role in cell growth-inhibitory signaling arising from cell-cell contact conditions.
Keyword
R-PTP-kCell contact inhibitionE2Fp21p27
ISSN
2227-9059
Publisher
MDPI
Full Text Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10123199
Type
Article
Appears in Collections:
Division of A.I. & Biomedical Research > Genomic Medicine Research Center > 1. Journal Articles
Files in This Item:
  • There are no files associated with this item.


Items in OpenAccess@KRIBB are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.